1 1 Sinai Artifacts Are On Display Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) Home Health Aide (HHA) Companion/Sitter Registered Nurses (RN) Licensed Practical Nurses (LPN) • JCAHO Accredited • 24 Hour/ 7 Day Per Week Service • Foreign Language & Hearing Impaired 1ntrepreters Available Abcare's HomeHealth Exchange A Division Of Exchange Services, Inc. 1-800-70-NURSE If you have an elderly relative or friend that can no longer live independently, we can provide personal care and protection for your loved one's in a comfortable home-setting. Conveniently located in Farmington Hills with a country atmosphere. o 24 Hour Personal Care And Protection o 24 Hour Physician Service For Routine Emergencies O Dental Services OPharmacy And Laboratory Service OStaffing — 24 Hours A Day — 7 Days A Week OAll Meals, Housekeeping, Transportation Provided To Doctor and Dental Appointments • State Licensed • Member Michigan Residential Care Association WOODCREEK ADULT FOSTER CARE A Home For The Elderly 28024 Middlebelt, Farmington Hills, MI (810) 855-1836 (810) 437-8478 •Clinical Teaching •Testing/Evaluation •Therapeutic Tutoring 5454677 • 4334323 25201 Coolidge, Oak Park 4036 Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills NEW! From The Button Men Fun Food Catering For Your Private Party! Corporate • Bar Mitzvahs •Yiedcings COTTON CANDY • CANDY APPLES FROZEN YOGURT • FUNNEL CAKES • CONEY ISLANDS • FROZEN BANANAS • CORN DOGS • POPCORN • SNO•KONES (810) 960-7617 S EQUIP BIRMINGHAM 1489 S. Woodward 646-8477 ROCHESTER HILLS When Israel gained control of the peninsula, it immediately be- gan to build an infrastructure. "One of our main goals was to protect sites from being destroyed when roads were constructed," Mr. Goren said, "and another problem was curious tourists who explored half-exposed ruins. Truthfully, our work began as a salvation excavation." At the time, Mr. Goren added, the Israeli excavators felt like pi- oneers. "Sinai was virtually un- known to archaeologists. Very few sites had been excavated. There was St. Catherine's Monastery and a few places, mostly along the main road." During the archaeologists' 15 years in the Sinai, "we got to know the place and fall in love with it," Mr. Goren said. "It was a wilderness, but with a human touch. Bedouins live there. My children grew up among the Bedouins." It was the Bedouins who helped the Israelis identify po- tential sites, Mr. Goren noted. "They are familiar with the area and helped us very much," he said. Once a possible site had been identified, the archaeologists em- ployed a number of high-tech re- search tools, including satellite mapping, to determine what lay beneath centuries' worth of soil and sand. In all, the Israelis — most no- tably teams from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, the Is- rael Antiquities Department and Tel Aviv University — excavat- ed about 19 sites. Asked whether he and his col- leagues feel some regret handing over the artifacts to the Egyp- tians, Mr. Goren replied, "I do, of course, have a personal attach- ment to these things, but you must remember that even if they stayed in Israel, I would not keep them in my home. They belong in a museum. AP/ENRIQU E MARTI • Personal Care • Nursing Jerusalem (JTA) — Just weeks after Israel captured the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt in 1967, Israeli archaeologists began a se- ries of groundbreaking excava- tions that continued until the country's withdrawal from the area in 1982. Digging in a region that had been virtually ignored by the in- ternational scientific communi- ty, the Israelis unearthed a wealth of artifacts and skeletons, many dating back over 5,000 years. In a few months, Israel will re- turn the last of these archaeo- logical treasures to Egypt, under the terms of the 1979 peace ac- cord between the two countries. To usher out the end of an era, the Israel Museum last week launched the exhibit, "Sinai: A Farewell for Peace." Scheduled to close on September 12, this ex- hibit marks the first — and pos- sibly last — time that the Sinai artifacts will be displayed to the Israeli public. Thanks to the region's dry cli- mate, many of the finds are in re- markably good condition. Foremost among these are hundreds of cloth and basketry fragments from the 14th centu- ry CE; painted funerary masks from the 4th-5th century BCE; and a group of "nawamis" — round stone structures that served as burial tombs. More than 5,000 years old, they are the oldest structures in the world to have survived with their roofs in- tact. Some of the structures con- tained the remains of entire families. During a press tour of the ex- hibit prior to its opening, Israeli archaeologists recalled their "love affair" with Sinai and the unique discoveries made there. Avner Goren, the archaeolo- gist in charge of Sinai excavations for some 15 years, noted that the initial excavations were borne out of practical necessity. 3140 Walton Blvd. 375-9707 738-5291 3405 Orchard Lake Road Keego Harbor Putting finishing touches on the farewell exhibit.